Late cenozoic landforms, stratigraphy and history of sea level oscillations of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina

A depositional model accounting for the stratigraphic sequences which accumulate during a marine transgression across a dissected coastal plain aids in understanding the geologic history of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina. Application of this model to the Shirley Formation (mid...

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Main Author: Peebles, Pamela Crowson
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: W&M ScholarWorks 1984
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539616804
https://scholarworks.wm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2371&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-wm.edu-oai-scholarworks.wm.edu-etd-23712021-09-18T05:29:54Z Late cenozoic landforms, stratigraphy and history of sea level oscillations of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina Peebles, Pamela Crowson A depositional model accounting for the stratigraphic sequences which accumulate during a marine transgression across a dissected coastal plain aids in understanding the geologic history of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina. Application of this model to the Shirley Formation (middle Pleistocene) and the Sedgefield and Lynnhaven members of the Tabb Formation (late Pleistocene) allows delineation of (1) the facies within, (2) the areal extent of, and (3) the landforms associated with these lithostratigraphic units. Facies within each lithostratigraphic unit consist of (1) a vertical succession from local, basal, channel-fill deposits and coarse, basal, lag deposits which grade upward into finer-grained deposits of estuaries or protected embayments or into medium to coarse sands of former barriers and (2) a lateral succession seaward from estuarine deposits to sediments of protected embayments and barriers. Sediment textures, sedimentary bedding-structures, fossils and plant detritus aid in interpreting paleoenvironments within each lithostratigraphic unit. Each lithostratigraphic unit corresponds to a separate marine transgression. Valleys formed during low stands of sea level subsequently widened and filled during the succeeding marine transgression. Coarse sediments accumulated along the shoreline as the sea advanced landward, forming a discontinuous sheet of basal lag deposits. Finer-grained deposits accumulated in estuaries or protected embayments and intertongue with or are covered by landward-migrating barrier deposits along the seaward margin of each lithostratigraphic unit. Three middle and late Pleistocene sea level oscillations are thus recorded in deposits of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina. 1984-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539616804 https://scholarworks.wm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2371&context=etd © The Author Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects English W&M ScholarWorks Geology Ocean Engineering Physical and Environmental Geography
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Geology
Ocean Engineering
Physical and Environmental Geography
spellingShingle Geology
Ocean Engineering
Physical and Environmental Geography
Peebles, Pamela Crowson
Late cenozoic landforms, stratigraphy and history of sea level oscillations of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina
description A depositional model accounting for the stratigraphic sequences which accumulate during a marine transgression across a dissected coastal plain aids in understanding the geologic history of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina. Application of this model to the Shirley Formation (middle Pleistocene) and the Sedgefield and Lynnhaven members of the Tabb Formation (late Pleistocene) allows delineation of (1) the facies within, (2) the areal extent of, and (3) the landforms associated with these lithostratigraphic units. Facies within each lithostratigraphic unit consist of (1) a vertical succession from local, basal, channel-fill deposits and coarse, basal, lag deposits which grade upward into finer-grained deposits of estuaries or protected embayments or into medium to coarse sands of former barriers and (2) a lateral succession seaward from estuarine deposits to sediments of protected embayments and barriers. Sediment textures, sedimentary bedding-structures, fossils and plant detritus aid in interpreting paleoenvironments within each lithostratigraphic unit. Each lithostratigraphic unit corresponds to a separate marine transgression. Valleys formed during low stands of sea level subsequently widened and filled during the succeeding marine transgression. Coarse sediments accumulated along the shoreline as the sea advanced landward, forming a discontinuous sheet of basal lag deposits. Finer-grained deposits accumulated in estuaries or protected embayments and intertongue with or are covered by landward-migrating barrier deposits along the seaward margin of each lithostratigraphic unit. Three middle and late Pleistocene sea level oscillations are thus recorded in deposits of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina.
author Peebles, Pamela Crowson
author_facet Peebles, Pamela Crowson
author_sort Peebles, Pamela Crowson
title Late cenozoic landforms, stratigraphy and history of sea level oscillations of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina
title_short Late cenozoic landforms, stratigraphy and history of sea level oscillations of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina
title_full Late cenozoic landforms, stratigraphy and history of sea level oscillations of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina
title_fullStr Late cenozoic landforms, stratigraphy and history of sea level oscillations of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina
title_full_unstemmed Late cenozoic landforms, stratigraphy and history of sea level oscillations of southeastern Virginia and northeastern North Carolina
title_sort late cenozoic landforms, stratigraphy and history of sea level oscillations of southeastern virginia and northeastern north carolina
publisher W&M ScholarWorks
publishDate 1984
url https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539616804
https://scholarworks.wm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2371&context=etd
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